Data collected by the Local Democracy Reporting Service through the freedom of information act has revealed that 11,624 noise complaints were logged to councils in 2025. In terms of the raw number of complaints, Durham County Council recorded 3,405, Newcastle City Council 2,680, and Gateshead Council 1,502.
The postcodes with the most noise complaints in 2025 by council area are as follows:
Councils have to examine noise complaints that could be what is legally known as a ‘statutory nuisance’. To qualify, noise must significantly interfere with the “use or enjoyment” of a house or other premises or have the potential to adversely affect someone’s health.
In certain cases, local authorities can issue abatement notices over noise complaints compelling those responsible to stop. Breaching such orders can lead to fines or prosecutions and even noise generating equipment being sized.
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The breakdown of complaints by postcode or electoral ward per each regional authority is as follows:
Durham County Council:
DL4: 121
DL5: 238
DL12: 35
DL13: 50
DL14: 270
DL15: 144
DL16: 135
DL17: 171
DH1: 236
DH2: 159
DH3: 69
DH4: 34
DH6: 209
DH7: 221
DH8: 216
DH9: 243
SR7: 177
SR8: 407
NE16: 26
NE17: 4
TS21: 57
TS27: 54
TS28: 44
TS29: 48
No Postcode recorded: 37
Total: 3405
Owen Cleugh, Durham County Council’s safer places manager, said: “County Durham is the largest local authority area in the North East, serving over half a million residents and home to over 14,000 businesses. Therefore, figures for the county can be higher than smaller authority areas.
“We investigate any complaints we receive and work closely with all parties to identify a solution. In the vast majority of our cases, we are able to resolve the matter without needing to take formal action.”
Newcastle City Council:
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NE1: 150
NE2: 398
NE3: 228
NE4: 390
NE5: 320
NE6: 426
NE7: 56
NE13: 45
NE15: 182
Blanks: 480
Out of Area: 5
Total: 2680
A council spokesperson said: “The vast majority of complaints relate to residential homes, commercial properties and public events and include things like barking dogs, construction work, and house parties to name a few. We work with the police and social housing providers to resolve complaints.
“In most cases we advise the complainant to speak to their neighbour which tends to resolve the issue, however we can and do step in when this is not enough.
“We ask complainants to keep a log of noise activity as we can only act on evidence. We use specialist equipment to gather data to ascertain if a nuisance exists. If it does, we have a range of actions at our disposal ranging from sending a letter to visiting a property.”
*Sunderland City Council could not break down the figures for domestic complaints prior to April 2025 by postcode. The data for household complaints is from 01/04/2025 to 31/12/2025.
South Tyneside Council:
NE31: 112
NE32: 131
NE33: 261
NE34: 239
NE35: 40
NE36: 11
SR6: 28
Total: 822
* North Tyneside Council:
Chirton and Percy Main: 96
North Shields: 82
Wallsend Central: 70
Howdon: 56
Longbenton and Benton: 46
Whitley Bay North: 42
Camperdown: 35
Preston with Preston Grange: 33
Tynemouth: 33
Wallsend North: 33
Shiremoor: 32
New York and Murton: 32
Backworth and Holystone: 26
Weetslade: 26
Forest Hall: 24
Monkseaton: 17
Battle Hill: 17
Cullercoats and Whitley Bay South: 17
Killingworth: 13
St Mary’s: 4
Total: 734
*North Tyneside Council was unable to break down noise complaints by postcode.
Police were called to reports of a man with knives on Roseberry Avenue in Coventry
17:32, 29 May 2026Updated 17:37, 29 May 2026
A man has been arrested after a man ‘with knives’ was reported to police in Coventry. He was apprehended at Park Edge Family Hub on Roseberry Avenue.
Police responded to the incident, which is alleged to have happened on Roseberry Avenue at around 10.40am on Thursday (May 28). He was arrested inside Park Edge Family Hub, where Bell Green Nursery is located.
Paramedics attended the scene and discovered the man had suffered serious injuries and he was taken to University Hospital Coventry (UHCW).
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No other injuries were reported, and the knives were seized. Police confirmed that the man has been discharged from UHCW and taken into custody for questioning.
A spokesman for West Midlands Police said: “We responded to reports of a man with knives on Roseberry Avenue in Coventry at around 10.40am yesterday (May 28).”, reports Coventry Live.
“He went into a nearby building and was arrested a short time later on suspicion of possessing a bladed article. No one was injured, and the knives were recovered.”
West Midlands Ambulance Service said: “We were called to an incident at an address on Roseberry Avenue in Coventry at 11.37am. Crews found a man who they treated for serious injuries before he was conveyed to University Hospital Coventry and Warwickshire.”
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A spokesman for Bell Green Nursery said: “We would like to stress that at no point did the individual enter the nursery or have any contact with any of the children, staff, or families within our setting.
“As a precaution, our team followed all appropriate safeguarding and lockdown procedures, and children remained safe and well throughout. Parents were informed of the situation, which was resolved within approximately 40 minutes.
“We are incredibly proud of our staff for their professionalism and calm response, and we would like to thank parents for their understanding and cooperation during the incident. Thank you for your continued support.”
Lao and Thai rescue teams shared the news Friday, including a video showing the first rescued villager walking unsteadily with assistance. He was handed over to other team members for a medical check amid a waiting crowd.
The five villagers were located by divers Wednesday but rescue workers still face the dual challenge of extricating the remaining individuals and locating two more who are still missing.
Evacuations for the other four were paused until Saturday because they were not yet ready, according to Chakkit Taengtang of the Sai Than Association, one of the Thai rescue organizations on site.
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Rescue teams had been pumping water out of the flooded cave passages throughout Friday, but a morning rainstorm complicated their efforts. The trapped men have been supplied with water, soft food, and foil blankets to help them stay warm.
The villagers reportedly entered the cave last week in search of valuable minerals before being caught by flash flooding that blocked their exit. One other villager managed to escape in time and alerted authorities to the seven left behind.
This image made from the video provided by Benz Norrased Palasing Seascout Diving shows the villagers who were trapped and found in a flooded cave in Xaisomboun province, Laos, Wednesday, May 27, 2026 (Benz Norrased Palasing Seascout)
A video filmed inside the cave on Thursday vividly captured the desperation of the trapped men. Thai rescue diver Norrased Palasing spoke with a villager named Khamla, who urgently requested the group be allowed to swim out immediately.
“I can’t go on. I don’t have any strength,” he said.
Norrased reassured him that the water was being drained, providing blankets and food, and cautioned Khamla to eat slowly to prevent digestive issues.
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Divers from several nations joined the rescue effort
Rescue teams from Laos and neighboring Thailand were joined by Japanese and Malaysian colleagues. Indonesian and French specialists also had been reported to be coming to the site in a rugged area in the central province of Xaisomboun, about 120 kilometers (75 miles) north of the capital, Vientiane.
Working in the dark in unfamiliar surroundings, divers had to make their way through twisting, narrow, flooded passages with jagged walls.
A good rescue plan depends on “the length of the dives involved, the restrictions and the sheer size of the passages that they are in, and the support that’s available,” said Gary Mitchell, press officer for the South & Mid Wales Cave Rescue Team, which is associated with the British Cave Rescue Council.
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Other necessities normally include the space and equipment to recharge air or oxygen cylinders, and a medical team.
Rescuers must weigh risks of waiting for flooding to recede
At the same time, rescuers must weigh the high risks of guiding survivors without diving skills through zero-visibility water against the strategy of waiting for water levels to recede, said Mitchell, who took part in the complicated 2018 cave rescue in northern Thailand of 12 schoolboys and their soccer coach. Several of the divers at the Lao site had also taken part in the Thai rescue.
“You can’t leave people underground too long without medical support, without proper food, sustenance, clean water … before their condition is going to deteriorate,” Mitchell warned Thursday from Wales in a video interview.
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The five found Wednesday were identified by their first names as Khamla, Mued, Ee, Ing, and Laen. They were reportedly in good health but exhausted from dehydration and lack of food.
A video filmed by Norrased showed the emotional moment he and Finnish diving instructor Mikko Paasi emerged from the water and discovered the trapped men sitting on a rock surrounded by floodwater.
Mued delivered a message to his family on camera, saying, “Don’t worry mom, dad. I’m still strong, I’m still healthy. Tomorrow I will be home. I love you, mom and dad.”
Lao officials say the villagers normally forage in the mountainous surroundings for a living.
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The villagers are believed to have been searching for gold
The villagers had been reported to have entered the cave to look for gold deposits. Bounphong Khammanyvong, a local official in Longcheng, the district where the cave is located, said they had noticed rocks or sand with unusual colors in the cave, so they entered it in the hope of digging them out to see if they were valuable.
Bounphong, in an interview on Thursday with local media outlet Xaisomboun Province Television, said the villagers entered the cave on May 20, contradicting rescuers who put the date at May 19.
The three deaths are being treated as unexpected, the police force has said
A man, woman and a child have died after a fall from a high-rise block of flats in south London earlier this week.
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Emergency services were called to flats on Churchyard Row, Elephant and Castle, at 7.29am on Wednesday, May 27, following reports that people had fallen from height, the Metropolitan Police said.
At the scene, three people – a man, a woman and a child – were found to have died, despite resuscitation attempts by emergency services personnel.
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Their deaths are being treated as unexpected and the Met is investigating, the force said. It is understood that detectives will assess whether any of the deaths are suspicious as part of their investigation.
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There were no other reported injuries.
A spokesperson for the Met Police said: “Work is under way to formally identify those who died. Their next-of-kin have been informed and are being supported by specialist officers.
“Detectives are urging any witnesses or anyone with information to come forward by calling 101, quoting CAD 1613/27MAY.”
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A London Ambulance Service spokesperson said: “We were called at 7.31am on Wednesday May 27 to reports of an incident on Churchyard Row, SE11.
“We sent a number of resources to the scene including ambulance crews, a paramedic in a fast response car, an incident response officer and paramedics from our hazardous area response team (HART).
“We also dispatched a trauma team in a car from London’s Air Ambulance. Our first paramedic arrived in around four minutes.
“Very sadly, despite the best efforts of our crews, three people were pronounced dead at the scene.”
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In an email to residents, building management said the police are on site and they are assisting the authorities.
The email added: “We know that seeing this kind of activity in your building can be unsettling, but we wanted to reassure all residents that the building is safe.
“There is no risk to residents, and everything is operating as normal.”
A resident said one of the people who died was a girl, adding: “No one has told us anything either.”
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He said lots of international students live in the building.
Another nearby resident said she heard sirens and that her husband came to look and saw paramedics performing CPR on Wednesday morning.
Halyna Hoisan, 29, was being stalked by her ex-partner Yurii Muzyka who she had reported to the police
Eliana Nunes News Reporter and Husna Anjum Senior Reporter
17:16, 29 May 2026
A mother was stabbed to death by her ‘controlling’ ex-partner who refused accept their break-up. Yurii Muzyka, 34, killed Halyna Hoisan, 29, before filming a ‘selfie video’ near her body after the horrific attack.
Ms Hoisan, known as Lina, had been in a “turbulent” relationship with Muzyka for several years The Mirror reports. Previously in court, jurors were told she had reported him to police for violence, harassment and stalking.
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He in turn made counter-allegations against her but was subject to a non-molestation order. On August 27 of last year he forced his way into Ms Hoisan’s flat in Greenwich, south London.
Undeterred by the presence of their three-year-old daughter, Muzyka stabbed her six times in the chest. He then took photographs of Ms Hoisan as she lay dying before plunging the knife into his stomach after a man she had been on a second date with ran to alert police.
Following a trial at the Old Bailey, Muzyka, a Ukrainian national from New Malden, south London, was found guilty of murder and possession of a blade. Sentencing him on Friday to life in prison with a minimum term of 30 years, Judge Simon Mayo KC said it was a “planned and sustained” attack on a “much-loved” mother in her own home.
He told Muzyka: “You stabbed her six times to the chest using a knife that you had purchased less than six hours earlier. Shortly beforehand, you conducted internet searches directed at identifying the most vulnerable areas of the human body, including the chest.
“I am sure you intended to kill her. In killing Halyna, you robbed her young daughter of her mother just days before her fourth birthday.
“You knew your child would be present in the flat when you arrived. That knowledge did not deter you.
“That is a matter of particular gravity. I am sure your actions were driven by jealousy, resentment and determination to exert control over Halyna even after your relationship had come to an end.”
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The judge said Muzyka had entered his former partner’s home armed with a knife and metal chisel using “stealth” and “subterfuge”. He described the act of photographing Ms Hoisan as she lay dying as “degrading and intrusive”, and said a selfie video capturing her final moments had caused “incalculable” distress to her family.
It was also reported that Ms Hoisan moved to Greenwich to escape him, however discovered a tracking device in her daughter’s scooter after Muzyka told her he knew which park she visited. She handed the tracker to police and also reported that he had stolen her phone from her home.
Last August, Muzyka phoned Ms Hoisan’s mother, Svitlana, in Poland and threatened to kill her daughter. Seven days before the murder, Ms Hoisan secured a non-molestation order against him.
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On the day of the killing, Muzyka bought a knife and recorded a number of videos on his phone in which he told his mother he “just can’t bear it” and accused his former partner of “sleeping around”. The court heard Ms Hoisan had just begun a new relationship and was on a second date with a man when Muzyka burst into her home and attacked her.
After the killing, Muzyka was taken to hospital for surgery on his self-inflicted wound. When arrested two days later, he told police: “I can’t believe my partner have sex with another boy.”
Investigators found evidence on his mobile phone showing an obsession with spyware, masks, knives and human anatomy. He had searched these topics repeatedly and had 10 images of spyware, 44 of masks, 186 of the chest and heart, and 261 of knives.
Muzyka denied murder and claimed he had lost control, but this was rejected by the jury. During the sentencing hearing, Ms Hoisan’s mother, Svitlana, became angry and tearful as she addressed Muzyka in Ukrainian in court.
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In her victim impact statement, she said: “The death of my daughter has had a profound impact on me. I cannot comprehend how one person can do something like this to another human being.
“I still cannot believe she is gone. I constantly think how much she suffered and the fear she must have experienced before her death.”
Muzyka hung his head in the dock and appeared to wipe away his tears.
Detective Chief Inspector Mark Franklin, from Scotland Yard, said: “Halyna’s murder was an appalling act of cruelty. Muzyka robbed a child of her devoted mother and parents of a loving daughter. Detectives worked tirelessly to bring Muzyka to justice and the successful conviction highlights the Met’s commitment to bringing dangerous men to justice and tackling violence against women and girls.”
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A child aged three fell from a flat window, which prompted a large emergency response in Liverpool today. Emergency services have remained at the scene following the incident today, on May 29.
It was reported that a girl had fallen from a first-floor window at around 11am. Merseyside Police, North West Ambulance Service and an air ambulance all attended the scene on Chadwick Street in Moreton, with people near to the scene telling the ECHO how several police cars and ambulances had arrived at the scene following the incident.
One man said how he saw around five police cars and an ambulance before hearing the air ambulance overhead, with the incident believed to have taken place at a block of flats near to the post office on Chadwick Street.
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The child was taken to hospital and is believed to have suffered non-life threatening injuries.
Merseyside Police officers remain at the scene to carry out enquiries.
It comes after reports of large groups of children gathering on beaches and popular promenade areas around the town over the bank holiday over the Bank Holiday weekend.
The town centre, harbour and surrounding beaches will be under the dispersal order from 3.05pm on Friday (May 29). It will remain in force for 48 hours.
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It means anyone suspected of entering the area with the intention of committing anti-social behaviour, or who is found to be engaging in it, can be forced to leave.
Anyone who fails to comply could be arrested or fined.
A spokesperson for Durham Police said: “This action has been taken to protect local residents, visitors to the area and businesses – some of which have been targeted with damage to property and nuisance behaviour.”
There will be an increased police presence in the affected areas while the order is in place.
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Parents are being asked to be aware of where their children are and what they’re doing.
Anyone in the town for legitimate, lawful reasons can continue to enjoy it as normal.
It doesn’t actually rain every weekend. That would be insane.
But many parts of the southern and eastern U.S. have seen their beach trips and picnics upended this spring due to a spate of weekend storms, making it seem as though each weekend is a washout lately.
The Memorial Day holiday weekend was the wettest Burlington, Vermont, had seen in over a century, according to WCAX. And in Beeville, Texas, flooding rain forced water rescues. Many social media users posted desperate messages of woe, lamenting their spoiled fun. “Death. Taxes. Austin Memorial Day Rain,” Texas user @EvilMopacATX wrote on the platform X.
Experts don’t believe weekends actually attract more rain, it’s simply that there is an increased chance of rainstorms this hot and humid time of year — and we may notice the downpour more when it’s on a day off.
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So what is actually driving these Saturday and Sunday storms?
“I believe the issue with rain on holiday weekends is simply luck of the draw,” Steve Decker, an associate professor at Rutgers University said, explaining the increasingly frequent sight of beach lifeguards in rain gear. (AFP/Getty)
Some have posited on social media that city air pollution, human-caused climate change and even cloud seeding are responsible for the frequent soggy weekends. But the reasons for weekend rain in the U.S. have been different from month to month, AccuWeather senior meteorologist Paul Pastelok told The Independent.
Over Memorial Day weekend, it was an upper-level area of high pressure that produced a lot of moisture.
“And so, everything was going from Texas through Missouri, Illinois, Ohio and then getting into the east and even parts of the Southeast ended up getting into a little bit of a rainfall as well,” Pastelok said.
In previous weeks, there was a different explanation.
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The polar jet stream — narrow bands of wind that blow around the planet from west to east — was pushing storm systems from the northeastern Pacific region through the Northwest and into the Ohio Valley.
Areas with recent rainy weekends, like the Northeast, were in a “sweet spot,” he explained.
Experts say weekend storms – even those that seem to hit every weekend – really just come down to luck (Getty Images)
“Timing wise, I can’t explain that. It just seems like we got into a funk that everything wanted to come on weekends and spoil things,” said Pastelok.
He didn’t think climate change or air pollution played into the timing or formation of these weekend storms, either.
Other experts agreed.
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“I believe the issue with rain on holiday weekends is simply luck of the draw,” Steve Decker, an associate professor at Rutgers University said. “Climate change can make rain events heavier when they happen, but that doesn’t affect the timing of the rain.”
Past studies had connected vehicle emission pollution to precipitation levels on week days and weekends, he noted, but the air has gotten cleaner since then.
That said, 44 percent of Americans are living in places with unhealthy levels of ozone or particle pollution, according to the American Lung Association latest “State of the Air” report.
It dumped on much of the U.S. this Memorial Day weekend and many places have seen weekend trips foiled by recent rainstorms. Experts say the answer for what’s driving these storms is multi-pronged (Getty Images)
And, air pollution can influence the behavior of precipitation, including how much rain falls, John Nielsen-Gammon, the Texas State Climatologist, said.
But, “any weekend effect ought to be minor,” he told The Independent.
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There’s also “no connection” between recent rainy weekends and the impending shift to an El Niño climate pattern, James Booth, a professor at The City College of New York, said.
El Niño patterns, which are natural parts of the climate, typically bring wetter and colder weather to the southern U.S..
While there’s a consensus among these experts that air pollution and climate change aren’t influencing the timing of weekend storms, that doesn’t mean they’re not factors in the storms at all.
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Scientists know that polluting greenhouse gases from fossil fuels – like carbon dioxide and methane – are responsible for warming the Earth’s atmosphere.
A warmer atmosphere can hold more moisture. That leads to an increased chance of storms and heavy rain (Getty Images)
A warmer atmosphere can hold more moisture. That means an increased storm formation and heavier rainfall.
“Climate change is certainly increasing the upper limit on moisture in storms but that influence is most clear in intense storms and in increasing variability,” Matthew Barlow, a professor of climate science, at the University of Massachusetts Lowell, told The Independent.
Where these storms dump may vary, says Nielsen-Gammon. But there’s another factor that can make them especially dangerous.
They may be more likely to stay in one place for a while.
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“Add to that changes in the jet stream tend to slow storms down which means they can dump more rain in one place,” noted Tom Rickenbach, a professor of atmospheric science at East Carolina University.
Brad Pitt has reportedly become increasingly estranged from several of his children (Picture: AFP via Getty Images)
Brad Pitt once had six children all carrying his rather famous surname. These days, it’s becoming increasingly difficult to find one who still uses it.
Maddox Jolie-Pitt has reportedly become the latest of the actor’s children to distance himself from the family moniker, filing to change his name to Maddox Chivan Jolie.
The 24 year-old is said to have listed the reason for the request simply as ‘personal’.
Angelina Jolie shares six children with her former husband (Picture: R.J. Johnston/Toronto Star via Getty Images)
While the legal filing is new, the switch itself may not come as much of a surprise to the Fight Club actor. Earlier this year, Maddox appeared in the credits of his mother Angelina Jolie’s film Couture as ‘Maddox Jolie’, dropping the Pitt surname altogether.
More significantly, he’s far from the first sibling to do so. Last year, Shiloh legally changed her name from Shiloh Nouvel Jolie-Pitt to Shiloh Jolie shortly after turning 18. Her lawyer later described it as an ‘independent and significant decision’ and said she was merely following the legal process required to make the change.
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Maddox (far right) is reported to have applied to change his surname to just ‘Jolie’ (Picture: Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images for FLC)
Zahara has also publicly moved away from the double-barrelled surname. During a sorority ceremony and later at her graduation from Spelman College, she was introduced as Zahara Marley Jolie rather than Zahara Jolie-Pitt.
Then there’s Vivienne, who appeared as ‘Vivienne Jolie’ in the playbill for the Broadway musical The Outsiders. So that’s now four siblings and four variations on the same message.
The former couple’s split continues to cast a long shadow over the family (Picture: Omer Cetres/Anadolu via Getty Images)
The growing distance between Pitt and several of his children has become one of the most visible legacies of his split from Jolie. Hollywood break-ups rarely stay private. Few, however, have continued to generate headlines quite as consistently as this one.
The roots of the family divide stretch back to a private jet flight in 2016. Days later, Jolie filed for divorce and later alleged that Pitt had physically and verbally assaulted members of the family – including the Tomb Raider and Salt star – during the journey.
In legal filings connected to an FBI investigation, Jolie claimed that Pitt argued with Maddox during the flight and put his hands on the then-15 year-old. Pitt has repeatedly denied the allegations and the FBI ultimately cleared him of wrongdoing.
Several of the couple’s children have publicly moved away from the Pitt surname (Picture: GONZALO/Bauer-Griffin/GC Images)
Nearly a decade later, reports continue to suggest that relationships within the family remain pretty strained. Maddox and his brother Pax are frequently cited as being the most distant from their father.
Pax previously made headlines after sharing a blistering social media post aimed at Pitt.
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People close to Pitt have consistently rejected suggestions that he has given up on his children. Sources have maintained that he wants a relationship with all six and hopes that some of the divisions can eventually heal.
Although this latest news seems unlikely to indicate that any mending of relationships is on the horizon.
The 24 year-old previously appeared in credits as Maddox Jolie rather than Maddox Jolie-Pitt (Picture: John Berry/GC Images)
Those close to Jolie have offered a very different interpretation, arguing that the fractured relationships are a consequence of Pitt’s own actions.
Maddox was adopted by Jolie from Cambodia in 2002 before Pitt later adopted him after joining the family. More than two decades later, his decision to reportedly drop the Pitt surname appears to be the latest sign that the family divide is now deeper than ever.
Kitted out with our Teva hurricane trailsetters in the respective men’s and women’s varieties, my partner and I set off on a loop walk through the South Downs.
Immediately we were both impressed with how spongy the shoes felt, having upgraded from the Craghoppers adflex low 2s. In my experience, the adflex shoes provided the brunt of their support via a firm fit, which secured the foot solidly in position. By contrast, I’d argue the trailsetters went one step further in planting my feet and ankles, combining an anchored feel with the brand’s ‘hyper-comf’ sponge to absorb reverberation and counteract the impact of hard, unpredictable ground.
The shoes were tested on sharp inclines and different types of terrain (Lucy Smith/The Independent)
As any well-versed hiker and tamper knows, loose scree and dry, dusty paths can leave you slipping and sliding all over the place, so a reliable tread and grip is essential. Along with your grip, you want to feel as though your ankles aren’t at risk of rolling as you traverse boulders, ditches and the like. While a hiking boot provides the utmost ankle support, a low hiking shoe like the trailsetter can be enough – so long as it’s been well designed.
The trailsetters are equipped with directional lugs (3D traction pads) on their soles, which ensure you’re able to brake from the heel and pick up speed from the toe. On top of the stop-start improvements these bring – specifically, I was able to come to firm halt after quickly descending a steep track – the lugs give your feet more purchase to bear your weight over tricky terrain, without rolling any ankles or, worse, taking a tumble.
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The drawstring tie takes a matter of seconds to secure (Lucy Smith/The Independent)
Circling back to the appeal of a low hiking shoe (instead of a boot), you can’t overlook the ease putting them on and off. On my year spent travelling New Zealand, including hiking a number of its great walks, my accommodation spanned scant tents and a low-roofed van. This meant that the task of donning my cumbersome hiking boots with their 16 lace-eyelets wasn’t the most appealing when I simply needed to run to the campsite loo in the early hours.
If you’re someone who frequently plans multi-day hikes, I’d urge you to consider the trailsetter’s low profile. You simply have to slide your foot into the shoe and pull the handy bungee drawstring. No water-logged laces, no impenetrable knots and a significantly lighter weight in your rucksack.
Admittedly, the trailsetters aren’t a perfect pick for marshland and extreme rain given they’re not waterproof. That said, with a rubber reinforcement across the toe, they’re definitely up to the task of April showers and muddy paths. In fact, they kept my feet entirely dry through a long, grassy field that was covered in morning dew.
Ultimately, at £115, Teva’s trailsetters – for both men and women – are a great mid-range pick. They’re not quite base camp material, but they won’t let you down on easy to moderate hikes such as Snowdon or the Seven Sisters. Providing, that is, that it’s not raining cats and dogs outside for the entirety of your excursion. Happy adventuring!
DEIR AL-BALAH, Gaza Strip (AP) — Majda was destitute. Her husband and eldest son had been killed by Israeli airstrikes. Living in a ragged tent in Gaza with rats and the stench of sewage, she couldn’t support her children and feared her daughters would be harassed going to the communal latrine in a camp with hundreds of strangers.
So she made a decision she now deeply regrets. She married off her 13- and 14-year-old daughters to men who promised safety and support.
“I thought I was protecting them,” she said. “Fear was slaughtering me.”
The devastation that Israel’s campaign has wreaked in Gaza has helped fuel an increase in marriages of young girls, according to experts and official data. With almost the entire population driven from their homes, most living in squalid camps and dependent on aid, some parents have sought some financial stability for their teen daughters by giving them away in marriage.
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For the girls, it meant a loss of their childhood and future — and, often, dangerous pregnancies.
For Majda’s daughters, it meant horrific physical abuse.
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Child marriage was declining before the war
Before the war, child marriage had been slowly declining in Gaza, according to the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics. In 2022, the last tally released by the bureau, 17.8% of marriages involved a girl under the age of 18, down from more than 22% in 2015.
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The minimum legal age for marriage in Gaza is 17, with some exceptions allowed; the U.N. and most humanitarian groups categorize marriages of girls under 18 as early marriage.
(AP Illustration / Peter Hamlin)
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(AP Illustration / Peter Hamlin)
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That trend appears to have reversed.
After an Associated Press request, the Supreme Shariah Court in Gaza, where marriages are registered, gathered data from court employees. According to its figures, 20.6% of the 35,474 marriages recorded in 2024 and 2025 involved a girl under 18, including 627 marriages of girls under 15.
The real rate could be much higher because many marriages went unregistered during the chaos of the war, said Amal Siyam, director of the Women’s Affairs Center in Gaza. The number of marriage contracts recorded by the court dropped 35% in 2024, the first full year after Hamas’ Oct. 7, 2023, attack triggered the war.
The AP spoke to six girls in Gaza who got married between 13 and 16 and their parents, all on condition they not be identified by their full names because of the deep sensitivity of the issue. The AP does not identify rape victims. Majda agreed to be identified by only her first name.
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All of the parents said that if not for the war, they would have never resorted to marrying off their daughters so young.
One mother is paralyzed by grief
After her husband and son were killed in separate strikes in April 2024, Majda descended into severe depression.
She begged the doctors for sedatives, which kept her asleep for days at a time. She couldn’t care for her girls in their patched-up tent by the sea, battered by wind, cold and rain in the winter. Charity kitchens, on which they depended for food, were scarce and irregular.
“I was entirely shaken from the inside,” Majda said.
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Two brothers in their 20s, from a family that had been their neighbors in Gaza City before they were all forced to flee, asked to marry her daughters.
(AP Illustration / Peter Hamlin)
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(AP Illustration / Peter Hamlin)
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Majda, who got married at 14, didn’t want a similar fate for her girls. But her father joined the brothers’ family in insisting it was the only way. They promised, Majda said, that they could sign the marriage contracts but wait until after the war to bring the girls to live with their husbands.
“I was not in my right mind. I am still not in my right mind,” Majda said. “I don’t know how I agreed to this.”
Majda’s eldest daughter, who was 14 at the time, didn’t want to accept. “I felt lost,” the daughter said. “I thought if I got married, someone would be financially responsible for me … I truly regretted it.”
Marriage is seen as a way to ease the family burden
Most of the girls who spoke to the AP said they were not coerced by their parents to marry. But they felt a duty to ease the burden on their families.
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By marrying, they were counted with their husbands as a separate family to receive aid from relief groups, rather than being under their parents’ allotment. Several girls also said that since schools largely shut down during the war, they saw no hope of continuing their education.
One girl said she and her parents and seven brothers and sisters were displaced more than 25 times during the war. Her father had been totally against early marriage and wanted her to enroll in university. But the family was so desperate that he agreed to a suitor.
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(AP Illustration / Peter Hamlin)
(AP Illustration / Peter Hamlin)
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She said she agreed as well. She was 16.
“I couldn’t forgive myself for taking a share of the little food my family had,” she said. She also worried that she and her siblings would be left without support if her parents were killed in an airstrike. Now 17, she was five months pregnant when she spoke to the AP.
Another girl also cited her family’s multiple displacements, each draining the little money they had. When they were sheltering at a hospital in Khan Younis, a 25-year-old man staying there asked to marry her. Then 17, she said she agreed.
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“Marriage felt like the only sense of normalcy I could restore to my life,” she said.
The law in Gaza allows exceptions to the minimum age of 17 with parental consent and authorization by a judge. The Supreme Shariah Court has rules for court officials not to approve exceptions below the age of 14 years and seven months.
But parents sometimes enter informal agreements without officially registering the marriage. Two mothers who spoke to the AP did so, one of them after an official refused because her daughter was 14.
In the Israeli-occupied West Bank, the Palestinian Authority in 2019 set the minimum age at 18, and early marriages have plunged since to around 5%, according to official statistics.
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Siyam said that at times of widespread displacement in conflicts with Israel, some Palestinians have seen marriage as a way to bring stability for their daughters. “Wars and conflicts lead to a return to more conservative traditions,” she said.
Younger girls who marry are more vulnerable to rape and violence, including abuse from in-laws as they load household chores on them, Siyam said. Because divorce rates in early marriages are high, “the girl ends up returning home with one or two children.”
Some girls were abused and fled
Majda said the in-laws broke their promise and soon demanded her elder daughter be brought to her 23-year-old husband, who was living in his family’s tents in Deir al-Balah.
For the first 10 days, the girl screamed whenever her husband approached her. “I kept screaming and he hit me,” the elder daughter said.
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Eventually, his mother “tied up my hands above my head,” the daughter said. The husband then raped her.
After that, he repeatedly threatened to bring his mother to tie her up if she screamed, she said. She recounted repeated instances of rape and said on one occasion, she had to be taken to the hospital with bleeding.
A few months later, the family came to take her 13-year-old sister to join her 21-year-old husband. She “kept screaming that she did not want to get married,” Majda recalled.
The younger sister told the AP that she too was tied up by her mother-in-law and raped by her husband. She said she had two miscarriages, both after her husband kicked her while she was pregnant.
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Majda’s elder daughter gave birth to a son. Months later, in November, she fled, carrying her son for 15 kilometers (9 miles) to her mother’s tent.
Not long after that, the younger sister also fled back to Majda. They then discovered that she was pregnant.
Girls experienced high-risk pregnancies
The maternity ward of Awda Hospital in central Gaza saw an increase in the rate of teenage pregnancies during the war, said the ward’s head, Yasser Shaaban. Many suffered severe health complications from getting pregnant so young, he said.
On top of that, the vast majority were malnourished, as Israeli restrictions on aid drove Gaza’s population to the brink of famine at times.
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Four of the girls who spoke to the AP had given birth, and all described dangerous pregnancies or births. Three had at least one miscarriage.
One of them almost died during childbirth from severe bleeding, her mother said. She was 16 and severely malnourished at the time.
“I was unconscious for many days (after birth), and I couldn’t hold my daughter for a while,” the girl said.
The family faced another painful choice
Back with their mother, Majda’s daughters were terrified at any talk of going back to their husbands. Speaking to the AP in April, her youngest said returning would be akin to “death.”
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Majda said her younger daughter had always been a talkative, playful girl. But since her marriage, “she does not talk to anyone, not to her husband and not to me,” she said.
The girls had returned to school, but the elder said she felt excluded and ashamed because she was the only student who was married with a baby. She described herself as a child mothering a child.
“I am tired,” she said. “I want to die.”
Majda was coming under heavy pressure from her father and her in-laws, who said she couldn’t afford to care for her daughters, the grandson and the baby on the way.
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Women can divorce their husbands in Gaza, but the process is expensive and complicated. Divorce also carries stigma, mainly for women, and would make it difficult for the girls to ever remarry.
The in-laws assured Majda that her daughters would be treated well.
Feeling she had no choice, she relented. The girls returned to their husbands, now in Gaza City, in early May. Majda hasn’t been able to contact her daughters since then.
“They did not want to return,” she said. “They were crying.”
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